CLARENCE PAGE: Why embracing diversity isn’t for wimps

By Clarence Page Chicago Tribune

Tuesday

Mar 12, 2019 at 2:01 AM

As Democrats wrestled among themselves over the past week before taking a House vote to broadly condemn bigotry and hatred, I was reminded of what former President Barack Obama said in a fiery speech on the topic last fall.

"We're supposed to stand up to discrimination," Obama said. "And we're sure as heck supposed to stand up clearly and unequivocally to Nazi sympathizers."

He was referring to President Donald Trump's seeming inability a year earlier to explicitly condemn a white nationalist and neo-Nazi rally in Charlottesville, Va. "How hard can that be," Obama memorably asked the crowd, "saying that Nazis are bad?"

Indeed, but calling out intentional bigotry is easy compared with the anti-Semitism that many critics perceived in remarks by freshman Rep. Ilhan Omar of Minnesota, remarks that left her fellow Democrats deeply divided.

Democrats boast the most gender- and ethnically diverse House in U.S. history, and Speaker Nancy Pelosi found herself embroiled in the downside of what that diversity means. Their famously fractious party has become even more deeply divided between its center-left establishment and its new generation of far-left progressives.

Many in the new bunch, including some senior members of the Congressional Black Caucus, see Omar's remarks as less problematic than the verbal offenses of, say, House Republican Steve King, who lost his three committee seats in January after he defended the terms "white supremacist" and "white nationalist."

With many Democrats joining Republicans in condemning Omar's problematic remarks, House Democratic leaders turned to a resolution condemning anti-Semitism. That led to a painful week of arguments behind closed doors. Diversity isn't for wimps. As I have often written before, what you say in such sensitive matters can matter less than what people hear.

I don't think Omar is a bigot, but, as with other sensitive topics, it's not hard to sound like one when you make strong criticisms in such touchy areas as U.S. policy toward Israel.

Last month, for example, she tweeted that support for Israel by the American Israel Public Affairs Committee was "all about the Benjamins baby," a hip-hop catchphrase for the power of money.

She also tweeted in 2012 how Israel had "hypnotized the world," again echoing anti-Jewish tropes about dual loyalties and Jews buying political influence. Under pressure from Pelosi and other party leaders, she apologized, but reaffirmed "the problematic role of lobbyists in our politics, whether it be AIPAC, the NRA or the fossil fuel industry."

She certainly isn't the first to hold that position. She sounded a lot like New York Times foreign policy expert Tom Friedman. He's a supporter of Israel but a robust critic of AIPAC as "a rubber stamp on the right-wing policies of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu."

But it's not hard to make legitimate criticism of Israeli politics sound like an attack against Israel and Jews in general. Omar, who can be quite gracious and charming in real life, turns into a bit of a liberal troll when she gets on Twitter or behind a lectern. That may excite a crowd that already agrees with her, but it's a poor way to persuade people to understand her point of view.

House Majority Whip James Clyburn of South Carolina awkwardly tried to smooth things over, but then he made the impolite mistake of calling her experiences as a Somali refugee and target of anti-Muslim hysteria "more personal" than those of the descendants of Holocaust survivors. It's seldom a good idea to diminish a victimized group's historical suffering by pitting it against another group's victimization.

Pelosi and other Democratic leaders appear to have put this controversy to bed for now, but other culture war-related episodes are bound to come up. Democrats have benefited from their appeals to diversity. But they now face the challenge of managing that diversity and unifying groups around what we share in common. It shouldn't be that hard.

Clarence Page is a columnist for The Chicago Tribune.

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